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how india handles its food. manual labors, conventional techniques at large government warehouse, transporting subsidized grains to millions of the nation's poor. these supplies, however, do not riche this kitchen. this 25-year-old mother of three doesn't have a government ration card that entitles poor people to buy wheat and rice at discounted prices. she doesn't even know how to go about applying for one. so, she spends most of her daily income of $3 on buying basic food items from the market. buying meat once in a while, she says, blows away a large chunk of her mason husband's income. ensuring nutrition is tough. but this family is on no fixed employment. doctors tell us our children are weak and we should give them nutritious food so they gain weight. but i can't afford the diet, she says. this has prices push higher the food prices. >> several parts of the country, there's malnourishment. nobody can deny that. and there's a need to improve the delivery of our public distribution system so we can meet the
how india handles its food. manual labors, conventional techniques at large government warehouse, transporting subsidized grains to millions of the nation's poor. these supplies, however, do not riche this kitchen. this 25-year-old mother of three doesn't have a government ration card that entitles poor people to buy wheat and rice at discounted prices. she doesn't even know how to go about applying for one. so, she spends most of her daily income of $3 on buying basic food items from the...
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listen to this one. $11 billion in treasure found under a temple in india. here's what they found, rubies, sapphires, emeralds, pearls, chunks of pure gold. hundreds of thousands of gold and silver coins. this is in a temple in india. who gets this stuff? >> you know, this is such a fascinating story. some reports are stating that this is going to be worth some $22 billion and they're also saying that the amount that this is worth is three times the size of the place where this was found. who gets it? apparently, they're saying that the temple gets to keep these treasures that are found. it's ironic, we're talking about a country where 37% of the population lives under the poverty line. you have to wonder, is that fair? >> money goes a long way in india. >> thank you. >>> all right, businessman special time. bacon, if you're a carnivore, you probably love it. your dog worships it. it's about to get more expensive. oh the humanity. we're asking christine romanman about it when we come back. discover customersl are getting five percent cashback bonus at the pu
listen to this one. $11 billion in treasure found under a temple in india. here's what they found, rubies, sapphires, emeralds, pearls, chunks of pure gold. hundreds of thousands of gold and silver coins. this is in a temple in india. who gets this stuff? >> you know, this is such a fascinating story. some reports are stating that this is going to be worth some $22 billion and they're also saying that the amount that this is worth is three times the size of the place where this was found....
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you asked them whether india was the enemy, and not too many raised their hands, a few more. and then you asked them if the united states was the enemy, and that's where you got most of the hands raised. that is something in this country just find in explicable, just can't understand. they say, my gosh, we've given pakistan $20 billion over the past eight or nine years and, granted, that's kind of a pittance compared to what has gone into afghanistan and some other places, but it's certainly more than in the past. can you just explain to us why is it that pakistanis don't like this country? >> first of all, let me begingy correcting the narrative -- begin by correcting the narrative at what happened at the university. eventually, the national defense university put a video on their web site in ace lam brad, and you can -- islamabad and, actually, you can see it wasn't -- those who taught, and this was a mixed audience of civilians and military, so it wasn't just the military officers there, we should be very clear about that. but those who taught that al-qaeda was the major t
you asked them whether india was the enemy, and not too many raised their hands, a few more. and then you asked them if the united states was the enemy, and that's where you got most of the hands raised. that is something in this country just find in explicable, just can't understand. they say, my gosh, we've given pakistan $20 billion over the past eight or nine years and, granted, that's kind of a pittance compared to what has gone into afghanistan and some other places, but it's certainly...
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eyes are also on russia and india, and there are demands for lower trade restrictions. >> terrace have to be lowered in countries such as -- tariffs have to be lowered in countries such as india. >> german cacar makers are investing in the development of fuel-efficient models. more and more consumers, especially in urban areas, are choosing greener cars. the german automotive industry has been working tords the development of alternative injuns. >> it is an intensive endeavor. alternative engines include fuel cell and hydrogen as well. we're working on all of these. no one knows which of these technologies will be the most economical. >> that is why german car makers are investing in research and development. >> of the months ago, the ceo of deutsche telecom said he was serious about putting women in top positions in any company. two women have been appointed to the management board. one is of former kinsey executive, and a former state education minister has been appointed to the board position overseeing human resources. up until now, the eight-person board was exclusively composed o
eyes are also on russia and india, and there are demands for lower trade restrictions. >> terrace have to be lowered in countries such as -- tariffs have to be lowered in countries such as india. >> german cacar makers are investing in the development of fuel-efficient models. more and more consumers, especially in urban areas, are choosing greener cars. the german automotive industry has been working tords the development of alternative injuns. >> it is an intensive endeavor....
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. >>> plus a hindu temple in india. you'll be amazed by what they found in the basement. >>> first, scott pelley has a preview of tonight's "cbs evening news." >> they helped win the race to space. but now, they're losing their jobs. the final flight of the space shuttle means the end of a career for many nasa workers, from astronauts to mechanics. where do they go from here? find out tonight, on the "cbs evening news." ♪ [ female announcer ] we all want cleaner laundry. we all want a world with fewer chemicals. we all want the best of both worlds. introducing all free clear oxi-active. a powerful new detergent without dyes or perfumes that helps get out your toughest dirt and stains. its added natural cleaning boosters help get your whole family's wash incredibly clean. tough on stains. gentle on skin. new all free clear oxi-active. tough on stains. foto be theres a calling for the veterans who protect our freedoms working with today's va i can use my license anywhere in the u.s. in the city or the wide open spaces i
. >>> plus a hindu temple in india. you'll be amazed by what they found in the basement. >>> first, scott pelley has a preview of tonight's "cbs evening news." >> they helped win the race to space. but now, they're losing their jobs. the final flight of the space shuttle means the end of a career for many nasa workers, from astronauts to mechanics. where do they go from here? find out tonight, on the "cbs evening news." ♪ [ female announcer ] we all...
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only grow 2% faster than india. it is not as impressive as it appears. massive investment, a huge number of airports, highways, high-speed rail. if you look at what you are getting out of it in terms of the return of investment, not as investment. china has a huge problem that they face. the u.n. can out with a report that pointed out that china will have a demographic collapse of the next 25 years. they will lose 400 million people. there is no point in human history in which you have had a dominant power in the world that is also declining demographically. it simply does not happen. if you want to look at what a country in demographic decline looks like, look at japan. how powerful is it? politically, even if china is the largest economy in the world, and those numbers are all based on purchasing power parity where there gdp gets inflated because the cost of a hair cut is less than one in toronto, but your international power does not depend on the price of hair cuts but foreign aid, oil, and international investm
only grow 2% faster than india. it is not as impressive as it appears. massive investment, a huge number of airports, highways, high-speed rail. if you look at what you are getting out of it in terms of the return of investment, not as investment. china has a huge problem that they face. the u.n. can out with a report that pointed out that china will have a demographic collapse of the next 25 years. they will lose 400 million people. there is no point in human history in which you have had a...
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the problem is there's not a corresponding willingness on the part of china and india to be definite and concrete about how open their markets would be. as we look at a doha round in any trade agreement, we want to make sure it's fair and balanced. we can quantify with great specificity what we're willing to do relative to our support structures and systems. we need the same kind of specificity from china, india, brazil and other countries in terms of how open markets will be to ensure we are getting a fair deal. >> one of the paradoxes of booming u.s. exports is that some of the most feared import dependent nations are the ones that have the greatest amount of food security and the most dependent on food prices seminar price spikes in more developed regions, they tend to bear the brunt because of their lack of car. for mr. security standpoint, how do you balance your charge, really secretary of aquaculture to boost u.s. exports at the same time some of the poorest nations need to become less dependent on this export? >> well, first and foremost were interested in making sure those d
the problem is there's not a corresponding willingness on the part of china and india to be definite and concrete about how open their markets would be. as we look at a doha round in any trade agreement, we want to make sure it's fair and balanced. we can quantify with great specificity what we're willing to do relative to our support structures and systems. we need the same kind of specificity from china, india, brazil and other countries in terms of how open markets will be to ensure we are...
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in india auntie's available in the grand central shirts in mumbai the taj mahal the mumbai polish president combine to shoot a baby which results from an ode beatriz's park close i could go on taj mahal hotel charges some retro town foolish kind of hotel crawling closer.
in india auntie's available in the grand central shirts in mumbai the taj mahal the mumbai polish president combine to shoot a baby which results from an ode beatriz's park close i could go on taj mahal hotel charges some retro town foolish kind of hotel crawling closer.
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for instance the drop in water tables in places like northern china and in india where bore wells were used to irrigate greenrevolution crops. so we need a second green revolution; one that is also ecologically green as wellas yield green. >>reporter: how do you see the importance of investment into agriculture more? how can we do that down the road? >>we have a huge unmet challenge; we have to invest more in agriculture to get more per unit land area of using existing technologies better and we have to invest more in research and development to find better ways to grow the food that give good yield, but also resilience. and then there's one more piece of this puzzle; and it's a daunting puzzle. we are already in the era of climate change, sometimes we talk about climate change as hypothetical, or for the future. well climate change is real;it's not hypothetical and it's not only in the future, it's in the present. there's more climate instability, there are more hazards; like drought and like floods that are undermining the food supplynow, not just in the future and there's more to co
for instance the drop in water tables in places like northern china and in india where bore wells were used to irrigate greenrevolution crops. so we need a second green revolution; one that is also ecologically green as wellas yield green. >>reporter: how do you see the importance of investment into agriculture more? how can we do that down the road? >>we have a huge unmet challenge; we have to invest more in agriculture to get more per unit land area of using existing technologies...
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inside the india executive committee there were people in our exit good you've got me to say now again he gives all to africa or lee to africa by the way we gave also to the orders a little bit less but december did millions that went to africa and another one you syria are giants into milan have unveiled the new coach local specialist john p. had a guest but even is the man to take up the reins on a two year deal after several beginners turn down the offer the fifty three year old was sacked as general boss last november. still becomes interest force manager in just over a year following. rafael benitez and leonardo. restless and ask whether if i want to take a photo you know it's a squad which hasn't lost anyone old we've got used players it's a team that two years ago wants everything maybe last year was a less attention testing season in terms of results anything better was of course to be expected but this can be used as a force for motivation. now some sad news from finland where former cross-country skiing great mackay miller has been found dead at his home in the town of coca-c
inside the india executive committee there were people in our exit good you've got me to say now again he gives all to africa or lee to africa by the way we gave also to the orders a little bit less but december did millions that went to africa and another one you syria are giants into milan have unveiled the new coach local specialist john p. had a guest but even is the man to take up the reins on a two year deal after several beginners turn down the offer the fifty three year old was sacked...
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and inside the india executive committee there were people in our executive committee saying now again he gives all to africa only to africa by the way the gave also to the orders a little bit less but the seventy million still went to africa. cycling now and australian all rounder could tell evans has won the fourth stage of the tour de france just ahead of defending champion alberto contador have been seen here in sunday's team trial twice fell behind because of chain problems and a puncture but he shrugged off those problems to catch up with the palace and and pace that accomplice or the spanish three time champion came up short by a mere ten centimeters in a dramatic final sprint is the most laps for the state into the steep climb at the end of this remains one second behind through push off of norway in the overall standings. golf now and unsurprisingly former world number one tiger woods has confirmed he will miss this month's british open because of his ongoing leg injury the thirty five year old has not played competitively since suffering a recurrence of the problems in his le
and inside the india executive committee there were people in our executive committee saying now again he gives all to africa only to africa by the way the gave also to the orders a little bit less but the seventy million still went to africa. cycling now and australian all rounder could tell evans has won the fourth stage of the tour de france just ahead of defending champion alberto contador have been seen here in sunday's team trial twice fell behind because of chain problems and a puncture...
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and inside the india executive committee there were people in our executive committee saying now again he gives all to africa or lead to africa by the way to give also to the orders a little bit less but december did millions they went to africa. nasa aside news is coming from finland where former cross-country skiing great make a millionaire has been found dead at his home in the town of color the fan was only forty one and police say they do not suspect any crime was committed malaria one and a limping gold at the nine hundred ninety eight winter games and not in there there's also the four time world champion across three cross country events but his was a checkered career after he was caught up in a doping scandal picked up a two year ban last year he admitted to using the blood boosting e.p.o. back in the ninety's. now three new sports will make their debut at the sochi winter games in twenty fourteen ski slope start snowboard slopestyle and the snowboard parallel special slalom were all being floated for the first time the announcement was made by the international olympic commit
and inside the india executive committee there were people in our executive committee saying now again he gives all to africa or lead to africa by the way to give also to the orders a little bit less but december did millions they went to africa. nasa aside news is coming from finland where former cross-country skiing great make a millionaire has been found dead at his home in the town of color the fan was only forty one and police say they do not suspect any crime was committed malaria one and...
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a strong supporter of independence for ireland, for india. before the war she had been very active in the women's suffrage movement and had gone to prison for times. and in this article about her, the writer just made one passing comment, one sentence where he said, naturally these activities were deeply upsetting to her brother. and it gave his name. sir john french, which i immediately recognized recognized as commander-in-chief on the western front. so i thought that is going to be a relationship which fully interesting to write about. and indeed it was. because this brother and sister of diametrically opposite views were nonetheless personally quite close. she was eight years older than he was. he was her beloved little brother. she taught him the alphabet when he was small. they were banned in touch throughout the war. they saw each other frequently. they stopped speaking to each other only when, in 1918, the british government sent him to ireland to be viceroy of ireland in charge of suppressing the nationalist revolt against english ru
a strong supporter of independence for ireland, for india. before the war she had been very active in the women's suffrage movement and had gone to prison for times. and in this article about her, the writer just made one passing comment, one sentence where he said, naturally these activities were deeply upsetting to her brother. and it gave his name. sir john french, which i immediately recognized recognized as commander-in-chief on the western front. so i thought that is going to be a...
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. >> un tesoro de gran valor fue descubierto en un templo en la india. en dos bÓvedas que permanecieron selladas por mÁs de 100 aÑos, estatuas de oro macizo, adornados con piedras preciosas que fueron ofrendados a los dioses. mÁs de $ 20 mil millones es el valor estimado. >> nos vamos a la pausa, enseguida,1 escuela abre sus puertas para los niÑos desamparados que no tienen hogar. al regresar. ¿quién quiere usar el mismo esmalte todos los días? yo no. revlon top speed" esmalte de uñas. colores atractivos con capa protectora, que seca en 60 segundos. con revlon, puedes cambiar tu color una vez, otra vez y otra vez... revlon top speed" esmalte de uñas. [narradora] salir de la deuda no es fácil. hable con sus acreedores directamente o visite termine con su deuda punto org. ( ♪ música ) >>> casi 300 mil niños en california duermen en albergues para indigentes o en la calle, una compañía abrió sus puertas para brindarles un nuevo futuro. >>> Ángel iván tiene sólo 14 años pero ha vivido experiencias que nmuchos no conocen en toda una exis
. >> un tesoro de gran valor fue descubierto en un templo en la india. en dos bÓvedas que permanecieron selladas por mÁs de 100 aÑos, estatuas de oro macizo, adornados con piedras preciosas que fueron ofrendados a los dioses. mÁs de $ 20 mil millones es el valor estimado. >> nos vamos a la pausa, enseguida,1 escuela abre sus puertas para los niÑos desamparados que no tienen hogar. al regresar. ¿quién quiere usar el mismo esmalte todos los días? yo no. revlon top speed"...
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in india a little in the grand central. the. polish president was sure that they would. no beach resort. taj mahal hotel. the cement hotel. hotel. in the radio to leave the. church in new delhi who took the babyhood to carry collection among the clothes of the other maidens. paul. robeson it was promised but they promised. activists are growing more vocal in their opposition to a u.s. military side and northern england inspired by the. project saying they have a right to know what's going on that. the shutters are up in denmark as the country passes strict new laws on border controls which have already caused anger from its european neighbors who say it might violate agreements on visa free travel. and libyan officials say they've intercepted two ships carrying belgian made weapons for the rebels it's all in violation of what you want. to the war torn country. a very warm welcome to you this is on live from moscow calls for independence from the u.s. the militarization getting louder in britain one of america's most trusted strategic allies peace activists have targeted
in india a little in the grand central. the. polish president was sure that they would. no beach resort. taj mahal hotel. the cement hotel. hotel. in the radio to leave the. church in new delhi who took the babyhood to carry collection among the clothes of the other maidens. paul. robeson it was promised but they promised. activists are growing more vocal in their opposition to a u.s. military side and northern england inspired by the. project saying they have a right to know what's going on...
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he was our ambassador to india. i ew none of the that. but i had the chance charlie to thank him from the bottom of my heart. he changed my lynch. and i have a son who i a teacher. teachesnglish in high school. and i'm so proud that that's what he's doing, so proud that he is having that kind of affect on the students he's teaching. and having, making his mark as a citizen, as a human being that way. >> charlie any regrets? >> me? >> charlie: yes. >> no. >> charlie: no. >> oh, some, of course. >> charlie: no great obsession, there's no great goal, there was no great sort of untain that you didn't climb. >> the best decision i ever made was to go to washington to though a job i had here in new york, good job, to the winds and go to washington in. new kennedy administration. when he said ask not what your country can do for you but wt youcan do for your country. i took that to hea. i went down and got a job at the usia when edward meryl was thee and opened upy life beyond journalism for me. at's when i found the photographs taken after the
he was our ambassador to india. i ew none of the that. but i had the chance charlie to thank him from the bottom of my heart. he changed my lynch. and i have a son who i a teacher. teachesnglish in high school. and i'm so proud that that's what he's doing, so proud that he is having that kind of affect on the students he's teaching. and having, making his mark as a citizen, as a human being that way. >> charlie any regrets? >> me? >> charlie: yes. >> no. >>...
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government and in the same vein, applying these european notions of conquest and discovery and describing india as a racist people that have inferior care to her, inferior religion and that the europeans were a superior civilization, basically notions that is that court in the 1820s saw blacks as also racially inferior indians in the same way. and while that racial attitude towards the blacks has been reversed now and rooted out of the lock, the same notion about indians remained in that it. there's a whole bunch of cases in that same line of judicial time that justified the absolute power of congress, you know, over indian tribes, persons and properties, the sanction of breaking the treaties unilaterally with impunity with the rulers in the entrance as if by unfettered guardianship, you know, without any judicial review, stamping out our religions are notions that really have no place in a moderate society that has much higher values. so we've come a long way under the law in federal indian law. we've had an incredible social movement, but this idea of the supreme court. back on those rights i
government and in the same vein, applying these european notions of conquest and discovery and describing india as a racist people that have inferior care to her, inferior religion and that the europeans were a superior civilization, basically notions that is that court in the 1820s saw blacks as also racially inferior indians in the same way. and while that racial attitude towards the blacks has been reversed now and rooted out of the lock, the same notion about indians remained in that it....
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when i was in some area in india where the malaria mosquito -- out of fear, there were questions. necessary. emotional system is such. more self-centered attitude here, more fear, more anxiety, more stress. >> they need you to project your voice. >> i think this should be sufficient. there are two levels of fear. one fear is with reasons. when a mad dog comes ready to bite, if you are still meditating compassion, it is rather foolish. [laughter] another kind of fear is protection. when you talk of fear, it is a bottled emotion. there are many other emotions. fehr -- fear -- selfish is part of our nature. without that, we would be like a robot. we cannot survive. therefore, we are selfish. wise selfish is much better than foolish selfish. it brings more fear. more suspicion. this unnecessary source of suspicion, it is based on the distressed, selfishness. -- this trust, selfishness. brotherhood, sisterhood. everybody wants happiness. i am one of them. the more the rest of the community is healthy, i get more happiness. there is no way to gain maximum benefit to oneself for getting
when i was in some area in india where the malaria mosquito -- out of fear, there were questions. necessary. emotional system is such. more self-centered attitude here, more fear, more anxiety, more stress. >> they need you to project your voice. >> i think this should be sufficient. there are two levels of fear. one fear is with reasons. when a mad dog comes ready to bite, if you are still meditating compassion, it is rather foolish. [laughter] another kind of fear is protection....
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was looking for warm bodies, any bodies, to help set up and run network of new intelligence bases in india, burma and china, she immediately volunteered. she didn't care where she went as long as she got to go. there was a man shortage and the newly formed oss was woefully understaffed. it's important i think to remember that when you think of the oss, you generally think about the paramilitary and guerrilla operations. they get all the glory. you think of grainy images of agents parachuting behind enemy lines, but the fact of the matter is of the 13,000 employees, about 4500 of which were women, the vast majority spent their time writing reports, collecting and analyzing information, and planning missions. so the fact that many of the oss is very unorthodox activities could be conducted from behind a desk meant that women could be equally as effective. and so while the majority of women did remain in washington, helping to support the oss's far-flung missions, a very small percentage went overseas. and an even tiny percentage ever went into active operations. but the small percentage that
was looking for warm bodies, any bodies, to help set up and run network of new intelligence bases in india, burma and china, she immediately volunteered. she didn't care where she went as long as she got to go. there was a man shortage and the newly formed oss was woefully understaffed. it's important i think to remember that when you think of the oss, you generally think about the paramilitary and guerrilla operations. they get all the glory. you think of grainy images of agents parachuting...
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it's favoritism by parliament for the shareholders of the east india tea company. there's the government being oppressive, the parliament, and i think it's important to understand what the revolution was about for many ordinary patriots was this effort to set up governments of their own, that their problem was that their governments lacked the power to protect the people and promote their prosperity, and that to understand the movement soully as antigovernment is to understand it really halfway and partly from the point of view of thee most well to do who are always the ones who can do without less government, and not from the point of view of the many people who made the revolution happen. thank you. [applause] >> thank you, barbara clark smith. next is john ragosta. >> thank you all for coming. i got started on this project several years back when i was living in coal pepper county, several hours north of here, and i became interested in the coal pepper minutemen, some of barbara's ordinary people, the classic farmers you read about in high school, shoulder the g
it's favoritism by parliament for the shareholders of the east india tea company. there's the government being oppressive, the parliament, and i think it's important to understand what the revolution was about for many ordinary patriots was this effort to set up governments of their own, that their problem was that their governments lacked the power to protect the people and promote their prosperity, and that to understand the movement soully as antigovernment is to understand it really halfway...
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and he says it has decreased in nigeria, india and afghanistan, and afghanistan it. they have -- [inaudible] but it increased from 60 some the 144 from 2005-2010. he didn't give reasons our hypotheses why this might be so. let it seems to indicate that there are parts of the country that just are too restless or not under the control of the vaccinations. do you have some insight on that? >> those are absolute numbers. 167, again, besides the population has to be borne in mind. of the four countries you mention, the fastest population growth has been pakistan. and so, therefore, we have more infants that require the polio vaccination. we have a national program for polio eradication. when prime minister took over in 1993, for the second term, it was one of our first priorities and we got it down instantly. right now in the last or years or so, the numbers have spiked a little bit. and they have primarily been in one area. and that has had to do with two things. one, is certain clerics making the provision that these vaccines are some kind of instruments of the devil,
and he says it has decreased in nigeria, india and afghanistan, and afghanistan it. they have -- [inaudible] but it increased from 60 some the 144 from 2005-2010. he didn't give reasons our hypotheses why this might be so. let it seems to indicate that there are parts of the country that just are too restless or not under the control of the vaccinations. do you have some insight on that? >> those are absolute numbers. 167, again, besides the population has to be borne in mind. of the four...
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here, the yom kippur war, peace with honor in vietnam, and a lot of the ways of the fight now, the india- pakistan war which defines what is going on in the subcontinent now. even at the end of his career and of his life, 1994, he was still in the game. he was still thinking strategically, and to him, the cold war, the effects of the cold war still were not over. he was concerned about russia, and his thesis was communism is dead in warsaw, but democracy has not yet won, and for that reason he was traveling back and forth to russia, worried about whether gorbachev or yeltsin was speaking on that topic. he got a call from president clinton, they had a conservation -- conversation about clinton's russia policy, and you could see how his policy changed along with the advice that was given by richard nixon. as i see it, that is the essence of the man. i would like to conclude by going back to senator dole's look cheap. he talks about the last sign he saw president nixon, at a luncheon held in the capital honoring the 25th anniversary of his first inaugural. president nixon stood and delivere
here, the yom kippur war, peace with honor in vietnam, and a lot of the ways of the fight now, the india- pakistan war which defines what is going on in the subcontinent now. even at the end of his career and of his life, 1994, he was still in the game. he was still thinking strategically, and to him, the cold war, the effects of the cold war still were not over. he was concerned about russia, and his thesis was communism is dead in warsaw, but democracy has not yet won, and for that reason he...